Why investors are restive at Budget tax proposals

Why investors are restive at Budget tax proposals

It has been a month since the Budget was tabled in Parliament, but the controversy involving the finance ministry's international tax proposals is refusing to die down.

Starting with the proposed retrospective amendment to Section 9 of the Income Tax Act, seen as a move to get over the adverse Supreme Court verdict on Vodafone, the controversy spilled over to taxation of foreign portfolio investments and taxation of foreign assets of Indians.

While the industry fears the proposals are retrograde and would bring back 'inspector raj' by giving draconian powers to tax officials, the ministry has been trying hard to justify its move.

Why investors are restive at Budget tax proposals

Its officials have provided several clarifications to allay the fears of foreign investors, including foreign institutional investors, who are threatening to pull out from India if the proposals are not revisited while passing the Finance Bill.

The issue that grappled the government immediately after the Budget was presented and saw intervention from Britain at a political level was the 'Vodafone amendment'.

The ministry said retrospective amendments were not uncommon and many, including the UK and China, had used the tool.

There are concerns that cases similar to the Vodafone deal may be re-opened and taxed.

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Why investors are restive at Budget tax proposals

The ministry officials say cases beyond six years won't be re-opened but those at various stages of litigation in various courts or where the court has already ruled in favour of a company may come under a tax scanner because of the introduction of a validation clause.

The move has started yielding results, with at least one company keeping aside an amount equal to the estimated tax on their buyout of Indian assets, even if the deal was with a company based abroad.

MS&AD Insurance Group of Japan said it would withhold the tax amount while buying 26 per cent stake in Max New York Life Insurance for Rs 2,731 crore (Rs 27.31 billion).

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Why investors are restive at Budget tax proposals

Though New York Life Insurance Company, which sold the shares, said the deal should not be subject to tax in India, as it held the shares in the life insurance joint venture with Max India through a holding company in Mauritius, it allowed the Japanese company to withhold the tax as a precaution; it would file for a refund later.

GAAR

The biggest concern of foreign investors at this juncture is the government's proposal to introduce a General Anti-Avoidance Rule.

Investors, who had several rounds of meeting with finance ministry officials, argued no other country taxes foreign portfolio investment in its stock markets.

Why investors are restive at Budget tax proposals

Once that call is made, investors go for the most economically viable route available.

"We are confident that investments would still come to India even if the Mauritius route is closed because there is no other market which could give good returns in the current global climate," a ministry official said.

Perhaps, it is this confidence, along with a widening fiscal deficit, that the ministry has so far stuck to its proposals despite vehement criticism from various quarters.

Under GAAR, it has also made provision for a treaty override to ensure 'impermissible arrangements' don't escape the tax net.

Why investors are restive at Budget tax proposals

India may have introduced the provision to address gaps in treaties with tax havens like Mauritius.

It has been for long trying to renegotiate the treaty but a favourable outcome did not seem imminent.

Another worry of investors is under GAAR, the onus would be on the taxpayer to prove the main purpose of an arrangement is not tax avoidance.

The tax officer would also have to prove the tax structure was impermissible, but the evidence to prove can come only from the investor's side, the ministry argued. It assured there would be adequate safeguards in GAAR once rules are notified.

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